residency at San Diego General in November of 1984. Orloff returned to Rajalla for three yearsâ hiatus, rotating though several of the capital cityâs then free outpatient clinics before returning to the U.S. in 1987 to specialize inâââ He broke off when he realized Alex was no longer staring at the computer, but at him. Christ. It probably would have helped if heâd remembered to glance at the screen once or twice. The blunder was moot now.
âYou have a photographic memory.â
He held her gaze. âItâs not as uncommon as youâd think.â
But it was.
At least, ones like his were. He was four when heâd discovered that. Kindergarten orientation, as a matter of fact. Heâd learned firsthand that not everyone could recall every sentence they read word-for-precise-word the way his mother couldâor the way he could.
Weirdo. Show-off. Smart-ass.
Heâd heard them all by the end of the school year. A couple of times from teachers, too.
Alex was still staring. She glanced down at the laptop. âHow long did it take you to read this?â
Oh, no. He had no intention of answering that one.
Unfortunately she had a watch. She used it, comparing the dial to the time stamp the computer had inserted on the fileâs initial opening. She gasped as she gaped up at him. How many times had he seen that look?
He forced a shrug. âWelcome to the freak show.â
Alex shook her head. âWhat happened?â
âNothing happened.â An outright lie.
She crossed her arms over her chest. âTry again.â
âLook, Dr. Morââ
âDonât âdoctorâ me, mister. You couldâve gotten fifty degrees if youâd wanted to. All I want is a simple answer. How does a kid with a brain that probably rivals Albert Einsteinâs drop out of the eighth grade? Why? â
âThatâs two questions.â
âPick one.â
The hell he would. What he did was stand up. Move. He paced his way to the bunk beds before he turned back, every inch of the floorâs twenty feet between them as he pointed to the computer. âPage sixty-two, paragraph five, line eight. Finish it.â The double-edged curse already exposed, he began reciting, ââOrloff returned to Rajalla for three yearsâ hiatus, rotating through the capital cityâs then free outpatient clinics before returning the U.S. in 1987ââ To his relief, she took the hint and severed her gaze, dropping it the screen to pick up where he left off.
âââto specialize inâ¦neurologyâ?â
He nodded as her eyes widened. âKeep going. Scroll down the next page. Paragraph five, line four. âOrloff is rumored to have taken multiple, unexplained trips during the past month. Each trip averaging three hours.ââ
âLet me guess, plenty of time to drive from Rajalla to Veisweimar castle, examine a patient and return.â
He nodded.
âDo you have a photo?â
âI was finishing the medical backgrounder when you woke up. I havenât had a chance to check our e-mail. Knowing Jerry, heâs already anticipated the request.â
She logged on to their encrypted account. Fifteen seconds later they had access, but the message wasnât there.
âNothing.â She tapped out a quick message and hit âsend.â
The tension returned as they waited.
Fortunately Jerry broke it a minute and a half later. Alex opened the e-mail and studied the electronic photograph the ARIES database tech had pasted within.
She nodded. âThatâs him.â
Jared stared at the color photo. The man appeared as tall as both of them were, with hair close in color and texture to the mop Alex had sported two hours before. Brown eyes, graying temples and a matching mustache completed an angular but otherwise nondescript face.
âYouâre sure?â
She tipped her chin to meet his eyes, her
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